Rick Horner told KOCO's Michael Seiden that he witnessed the attack and wasn't going to let the men get away without a fight.

Horner is used to helping people. He is an Oklahoma City firefighter.

"I don't care who it was. I would have done this," he said.

Destiny Stephens, 19, started screaming for help Thursday night when two strangers attacker her with a stun gun.

"I've had friends calling me, 'Rick, will you move in my neighborhood. You can call my old neighborhood. That's just how I am,'" Horner said.

Horner described the incident inside a gated community in Choctaw.

"I heard a horn and a scream, a blood-curdling murder type of scream, and I didn't know where it was coming from exactly. I ran around the back of my house to the front and saw her car sitting there and realized it was hers," he said.

Horner added, "(The attacker) had her arm, and she even told me that (she) had been shot."

He jumped into Stephens' car and chased the culprits for 12 miles. Horner said at one point, they pulled a weapon and opened fire at him.

Eventually, Horner ran out of gas, and the suspects got away. While he was not able to identify the two men, he said he believes this attack has to do with human trafficking.

"It wasn't just a boyfriend deal or someone wanting her phone number for a date. To me, it's just obvious that it's human traffickers trying to steal her," he said.

Police are not saying whether this had anything to do with human trafficking, but they are hoping somebody will come forward with information. The attackers were in a white Oldsmobile Intrigue with "HOU" in the license plate.

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